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Trump's spending cuts
Apr 14, 2025
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The Big Story
White House prepares rescission package
The Whi
te House is planning to ask Congress to approve more than $9 billion in funding cuts to a list of agencies President Trump has sought to eliminate.
© The Associated Press
That includes money for the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, which oversees PBS and NPR, money for USAID and agencies like the U.S. Institute of Peace, which Trump aimed to dismantle via an executive order signed in February.
The request cites various aspects of funding used by those organizations that do not align with the Trump administration’s priorities. It cites a PBS program from 2022 titled “Our League” about a transgender woman who comes out to members of their bowling league in Ohio.
It also cites numerous examples of funding from the State Department and USAID to be cut that are not in line with Trump’s agenda. Among those are $500,000 for electric buses in Rwanda, $750,000 for reducing xenophobia in Venezuela, and $3 million for a children’s developmental television program in Iraq.
A White House official confirmed to The Hill that the package will be sent to Congress when lawmakers return from Easter recess.
Simple majorities in both the House and Senate would need to vote to approve the rescission package in order to eliminate the congressionally approved funding. Republicans control both chambers, though their margin in the House is especially narrow.
The Hill's Brett Samuels has more here.
Welcome to The Hill’s Business Economy newsletter, I'm Aris Folley — covering the intersection of Wall Street and Pennsylvania Avenue.
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Essential Reads
Key business and economic news with implications this week and beyond:
Mark Zuckerberg takes the stand at Meta trial
Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg took the stand Monday, as his social media company faces off against the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) in a case that could determine the fate of the tech titan’s empire.
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Fed board member Waller sees stagflationary impact of tariffs
Christopher Waller, a member of the Federal Reserve’s board of governors, painted a stagflationary picture of President Trump’s tariff agenda Monday, arguing that the hit to economic growth could be more significant than the upward pressure on prices.
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Nvidia pledges $500 billion to manufacture AI chips, supercomputers in US
Nvidia will manufacture up to $500 billion of artificial intelligence (AI) chips and supercomputers entirely in the U.S. over the next four years, the company announced Monday.
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Trump administration sued after taking down public spending tracker
The Trump administration was accused of breaking the law in a recent lawsuit after taking down a website meant to show the public how federal funding is disbursed to agencies.
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Tax Watch
Welcome to Tax Watch, a new feature in The Hill's Business Economy newsletter focused on the fight over tax reform and the push to extend the 2017 Trump tax cuts this year.
Conservative tax group blasts tax hike for the rich
Conservative tax group Americans for Tax Reform is coming out hard against the idea of inserting a marginal tax increase for the highest earners into their extension of the 2017 Trump tax cuts, which cut the top income tax rate to 37 from 39.6 percent.
“Keeping the top rate at 37 percent is a red-line,” John Kartch, the group’s vice president, wrote in a social media post over the weekend.
He argued that increasing the top tax rate would negatively affect businesses since many are structured as “pass-through” entities, which pass their tax bills directly onto their owners.
“Most pass-through business income is taxed at the top rates, so raising these rates would harm Main Street businesses engaged in just about every aspect of the economy,” he wrote in a Monday editorial.
Group president Grover Norquist told The Hill that increasing some rates while dropping others was a bad strategy for Republicans.
“Somebody comes in and says, ‘I’ve got a brilliant idea. Let’s be the tax increasing party.’ That’s what kept Republicans in the minority until 1994,” he said.
In ascending order of brackets, the 2017 cuts took marginal rates down from 15 to 12 percent, from 25 to 22 percent, 28 to 24 percent, 33 to 32 percent, and from 39.6 percent to 37 percent. The 10 percent rate for lower earners was left in place as was the 35 percent rate for some higher earners.
— Tobias Burns
The Ticker
Upcoming news themes and events we're watching:
The Commerce Department releases data on March export and import prices Tuesday at 8:30 a.m. EDT.
Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond President Tom Barkin delivers a speech at 11:35 a.m EDT.
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In Other News
Branch out with more stories from the day:
Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg takes the stand in historic antitrust trial
WASHINGTON (AP) — Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg took to the witness stand on the first day of a historic …
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Good to Know
Business and economic news we've flagged from other outlets:
Stocks Rise After Trump’s Tech-Tariff Reprieve (WSJ)
Fear of unemployment jumps to highest level since the pandemic (CNN)
Airlines have a unique view of the economy, and CEOs are getting worried (CNBC)
What Others are Reading
Top stories on The Hill right now:
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In the Abrego Garcia case, the Supreme Court is letting Trump get away with it
The Supreme Court last week upheld a lower court’s order, directing the Trump administration to “facilitate” the return to the U.S. of a Salvadoran national whom it admits to having illegally deported to El Salvador’s infamous CECOT prison last month. Read more
What People Think
Opinions related to business and economic issues submitted to The Hill:
Sorry, but manufacturing isn’t what it used to be. Bringing it back will never be enough.
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You're all caught up. See you tomorrow!
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